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New Year Estate Tax Exemption

For 2019, the IRS has announced that the lifetime estate and gift tax exemption amount has increased to $11.4 per person, or $22.8 million for a married couple. This means that an individual may pass $11.4 million in assets without facing federal estate taxes. Married couples may still pass assets to each other upon the death of one spouse free of federal estate taxes. The surviving spouse may then elect to utilize the deceased spouse’s exemption amount (called “portability”) which would allow the surviving spouse to pass up to $22.8 million in assets free of federal estate taxes.

The annual gift exclusion amount remains at $15,000 for 2019. This means that each individual can gift up to $15,000 to an unlimited number of individual recipients without cutting into their $11.4 million individual lifetime estate and gift tax exemption allowance .

Check out this 2019 estate tax update from Forbes for more information on 2019 estate taxes.

Make A Quick List, Check It Twice

Wondering where to start as you consider creating an estate plan? Thinking through this short and sweet checklist will give you a solid foundation for your estate plan:

  • Beneficiaries: Who will get your assets when you pass away? Friends, family, charities?

  • Specific Gifts: Do you have any special items such as family heirlooms or jewelry that you would like certain individuals to receive after you pass away?

  • Trustee: Who will manage assets on behalf of your children if you pass away while they are young?

  • Executor: Who do you trust to distribute your assets as you have spelled out in your will?

  • Financial Representative (POA): Who should make decisions regarding your finances and other personal business if you become incapacitated?

  • Health Care Representative (POA): Who should make medical decisions on your behalf if you become incapacitated?

  • Living Will: If you are in a terminal state as determined by a physician and unable to make decisions on your own, would you like to receive life-prolonging care, or would you prefer to receive comfort care only?

Best wishes for a safe and happy holiday season to you and your family!

Holiday Conversation Starters

Looking for some reading material to pass the time as you travel this holiday season? Kiplinger’s comprehensive guide to estate planning provides a solid base of information for those thinking about creating or updating an estate plan. Consider discussing some key topics from Kiplinger’s guide with family and friends over the coming months:

  • Does your existing estate plan still makes sense given your present situation in life and the current climate of estate tax law?

  • Should you utilize a trust to handle asset distribution, protect your privacy, or avoid the probate process?

  • What type of information could you share with your family members regarding your estate plan to ease tension and establish expectations?

  • How should your assets be divided (equally or unequally) among your loved ones and when should those distributions be made?

  • Should you make lifetime gifts to decrease the amount of assets you hold at the time of your death and to take advantage of the annual gift tax exemption?

Safe travels, and happy planning!

Celebrating 5 Years In Business!

Five years have flown by! As always, thank you to my family, friends, and clients for your continued support in building this business. Over the past five years, I have had the opportunity to assist over 350 individuals with their estate planning needs. Meeting so many wonderful people and working together to develop custom, affordable estate plans has been an incredibly fulfilling and rewarding experience.

Even more importantly, our family has been blessed with three beautiful children over the last five years. Many of you know that the past year has been incredibly difficult for our family after the birth of our third child, our second with special needs. I will be forever grateful to my clients for your kind words, prayers, and flexibility this year as we have managed our child’s medical needs. Your compassion during this time is appreciated beyond measure. To those closest to us who stand behind us daily, your unwavering support is everything - thank you.

I Have A Will...Now What?

If you have created your will, congratulations - you are more prepared than over half of America! While a will is an essential piece of any estate plan, Kiplinger’s recently highlighted some important matters to consider after your will is in place:

  1. Review beneficiary designations on life insurance policies and financial accounts.

  2. Plan and even pay for your funeral ahead of time.

  3. Account for “digital assets.”

  4. Make sure no accounts are forgotten.

While getting your affairs in order may seem overwhelming now, addressing these items will save headaches for your loved ones in the future. A trusted financial advisor can be a valuable asset in making sure you have tied up all loose ends when it comes to your estate plan.

R-E-S-P-E-C-T, No Will Breeds Hostility

Soon after Aretha Franklin's death this August, news broke that the celebrity, worth an estimated $80 million, failed to create an estate plan prior to her death.  Franklin's attorney asserts that although the singer understood the need to create an estate plan, like many Americans, she just...never got around to it.

Under the laws of the State of Michigan, Franklin's assets would be divided equally between her four sons.  Because of Franklin's celebrity status, no estate plan means that there is a strong possibility that extended family members, friends, or other individuals will try to claim a stake in Franklin's estate.  Such contests could tie up Franklin's assets in the court system for many years to come.

So, how could Franklin and her family have benefited from an estate plan?

1. A will or trust would have eliminated questions regarding how Franklin's assets should be divided.  In addition to fending off potential claims from opportunists, by planning ahead, Franklin could have provided a clear plan for passing her wealth to her four sons, in particular her eldest son who has special needs and is represented by a legal guardian.

2. Franklin could have utilized a trust to keep her assets out of the probate court.  By eliminating probate court involvement, Franklin would have effectuated huge time and money savings for her family.

3. While a will would have provided a road map for dividing Franklin's assets, wills become public documents once they are filed with the probate court.  Trust documents, on the other hand, are not made public and would have allowed Franklin to manage her affairs privately.  Unfortunately for Franklin's family, the administration of her estate will be a very public ordeal.

Although decisions regarding what will happen to our assets after we pass away can seem daunting, planning ahead provides peace of mind for both the testator and the testator's family.  With a little planning, questions and controversy can be easily avoided.

3 Tips For Drama-Free Estate Planning

Estate planners agree that family fighting is the main threat to estate planning.  Why?  While existing family conflict, a lack of communication, and unrealistic expectations are typical causes of inheritance-related drama, an increase in the number of blended families that include children from prior relationships and sometimes younger spouses may be to blame as well.

So, what can you do now to prevent family tension in the future?  Check out these three tips from the writers at CNBC:

1. Address family conflict directly with your estate plan.  Failing to create an estate plan will only add to existing family drama.  By creating a clear estate plan, you reduce the potential for disagreement among family members regarding your wishes after you pass away.

2. Inform your family ahead of time.  Make sure you thoroughly explain your estate plan to your family members to help them understand not only what to expect, but why certain decisions were made.

3. Update your estate plan over time.  A change in your family situation should trigger a review and potential update of your estate plan.  It may also be beneficial to review and update your estate plan in response to new tax laws as well.

A little planning today can protect your family from conflict down the road.

Estate Planning After Divorce

If you have gone through or are currently going through a divorce, your to-do list may seem overwhelming.  However, it is important to make sure you consider updating your existing estate plan as you work through this process.  There are a few quick changes that can be made during the divorce process, while other changes may need to wait until your divorce is finalized.

1. Revoke your existing financial and health care powers of attorney and renew with updated designations.  You likely do not want your former spouse managing medical and financial decisions on your behalf.  These changes can be made even before your divorce has been finalized.

2. Update beneficiaries on retirement accounts and life insurance policies.  Many times, these designations cannot be altered during the course of the divorce process, but it is a good idea to check to make sure.  Once your divorce has been finalized, you should be able to move forward with changes as you wish.

3.  Update your existing will or trust to appoint a new executor or trustee, beneficiaries, and a backup guardian if you have minor children.  If you have an existing will or trust, you likely appointed your spouse to the role of executor or trustee.  Now that you have decided to divorce, you may wish to select a different individual to manage your assets upon your death.  You will also likely leave your assets to your children or other family and friends once your divorce is finalized.

For more tips on managing your estate plan during and after divorce, a recent article in Forbes provides a helpful checklist.

 

Check Your Assets

A will is an essential element of any estate plan.  The will takes care of transferring only probate assets.  This means that the will directs how assets that do not transfer automatically upon the owner's death should pass.  Non-probate assets, however, transfer according to how they are titled.  For instance, your life insurance policies and retirement accounts pass automatically to the beneficiaries you have designated upon your death.  Additionally, if you hold assets jointly with your spouse or child, those assets pass automatically to the surviving joint owner upon your death.  Some accounts and real estate can also be designated to automatically "transfer on death" to a beneficiary.  Generally speaking, your will then catches and distributes all other assets through the probate process.

For more information on how titling your assets can impact your estate plan, check out this article in Daily Local News.

Why? Why? Why? 3 Reasons To Plan

Do you really need an estate plan?  Is it really that important?  In a piece contributed to Forbes, Certified Financial Planner® Joel Johnson describes the three main reasons individuals create estate plans:

1. Minimizing probate fees and taxes after death.  There are many tools available to transfer assets outside of the probate process such as designating homes, cars, and bank accounts to transfer automatically upon one's death, setting up beneficiaries on retirement accounts and insurance policies, and transferring assets prior to death.  While Indiana and Ohio do not collect estate taxes, gifts during life and irrevocable trusts can be utilized to avoid federal estate taxes for large estates.

2. Protecting assets during life.  While Johnson's piece specifically refers to planning ahead for the cost of a nursing home (often referred to as "Medicaid planning"), this point can be expanded to include protection of one's interests during life through the use of financial and medical powers of attorney.  While Medicaid planning can be an important part of an estate plan, determining who will handle your financial affairs and medical decisions in the event that you are incapable of doing so is a crucial function of an estate plan as well.

3. Controlling assets.  Controlling how one's assets will be distributed after death is typically the main goal of an estate plan.  In order to have confidence that your assets will be distributed as you wish upon your death, it is imperative that you establish some sort of estate plan.  Without an estate plan, you relinquish control over your assets which often leads to court and familial battles that are less than ideal.

Family Feuds

Is the fear of upsetting family members holding you back from completing your estate plan?  You are not alone.  Many of us worry that relatives will disagree over bequests made by will.  On the other hand, some individuals incorrectly assume that no argument will occur.  The behavior of friends and family after a death occurs can never be predicted.  A recent article in the New York Times provides a few helpful tips to prevent fighting among family members after you pass away:

  1. Have difficult conversations ahead of time.
  2. Think through the trusteeship appointment and any possible conflicts that could arise.  Consider appointing a trustee outside of your circle of friends and family.
  3. Include trustee replacement provisions in your trust if you have one.
  4. Consider separate trusts for each beneficiary.
  5. Provide ethical guidance to beneficiaries in your will.
Where Is Your Will?

So, you have gone through the motions, you have made the decisions, you have finalized your will, living will, powers of attorney, and other estate planning documents.....but do you remember where you put them?  A lost estate plan is as effective as no estate plan at all.  Unfortunately, lost estate plans are all too common and can lead to big headaches for your loved ones down the road. 

A vital part of the estate planning process is storing your documents in a safe place and making sure your friends or loved ones know where to find them.  Where should you store your estate planning documents?  While any safe place will do, below are a few good options:

 

  • A fireproof safe in your home.  Make sure your family or executor know how to access the documents.
  • A safe deposit box.  Again, make sure family members or appointed agents have full access to the safe deposit box.
  • Your lawyer's office.  Some attorneys will store wills on behalf of their clients.  Make sure your loved ones know how to get in touch with your lawyer to access your documents.
  • Your local probate court.  By filing your will with your local probate court prior to your death, you can eliminate the risk of losing your will.
  • Your doctor's office.  By keeping copies of your health care power of attorney and living will on file with your doctor's office, you save your loved ones time and energy needed to search for these documents when they become necessary.

The most important part of storing your estate plan is letting your friends and loved ones know where these documents can be found for ease of access when the need arises.  It is also a good idea to store a list of your bank accounts, contact information for your financial planner and attorney, email and social media accounts, and all passwords in a safe place that can be accessed by your loved ones in the event of your incapacity or death.  As always, the best way to ensure proper execution of your estate plan is to plan ahead.

 

New Year, New Tax Law

You have surely heard about the new tax legislation signed into law by President Trump at the end of 2017, but what does it mean for your estate plan?  Below are a few key changes to the tax law that can impact estate planning:

  • The annual federal gift tax exemption increases to $15,000 this year, to be adjusted for inflation each year thereafter.  This means that each individual can give up to $15,000 in gifts to as many individuals as they would like in 2018 without touching their lifetime exclusion amount.
  • The lifetime gift and estate tax exclusion amount increases to $11,200,000 for each individual as of January 1, 2018, and will increase with inflation each year through 2025.  This means that each individual can pass assets worth up to $11,200,000 during life and/or at death without incurring federal gift or estate taxes.
  • The lifetime exclusion amount is still portable, meaning a deceased individual's unused portion can be utilized by a spouse.  As such, the exclusion amount for a married couple for 2018 is effectively $22,400,000.
  • On January 1, 2026, the lifetime exclusion amount will drop back to the 2017 level ($5,490,000 adjusted for inflation) per individual.
  • The federal estate tax rate remains 40% for those who exceed the lifetime exclusion amount.

 

Wishing you all the best for a happy and healthy 2018!

Celebrating 4 Years in Business!

This week marks my fourth year in business, and I could not be more grateful for my friends, family, and clients who have made this endeavor so fun and rewarding!  Over the past four years, I have had the opportunity to assist over 280 individuals with their estate planning needs.  Thank you to everyone for your support and referrals along the way.  I am looking forward to year five!

Estate Planning Tips For Parents Of Young Children

For new parents, developing an estate plan can seem like a daunting task.  Where do you even begin to make sure that your little ones are taken care of if the unthinkable happens?  The four special considerations below provide a good starting point for parents of young children who are ready to get their estate plan in order:

1. Appoint a guardian in your will to take over parenting responsibilities in the event that you and your children's other parent pass away.  Although this is typically the hardest decision for parents to make, a court will choose an individual to take over if you fail to name a guardian on your own.

2. Select a trusted individual or financial institution (a trustee) to handle your assets on behalf of your children if you pass away while they are still young.  This could be the guardian you have appointed, or you may choose another individual to act as trustee if you prefer to keep powers separate.

3. Choose an age or life event or achievement at which time you would like your children to receive your assets outright without the involvement of a trustee.  Many parents prefer to withhold outright distribution of assets until children exceed college age, but distribution could also be contingent upon milestones such as graduation, marriage, or purchase of a home.

4. Check your listed beneficiaries on life insurance, retirement, and other types of accounts to make sure your primary and alternate beneficiaries are up to date.  Any such beneficiary designations will occur automatically upon your death and will trump gifts made in your will.

If you take the time to think through these four considerations, you are well on your way to making sure your children are taken care of by your estate plan.

The Biggest Estate Planning Mistake?

What is the biggest mistake people make when putting together an estate plan?  We forget that an estate plan should not only be about writing a will to decide who gets our assets when we die, but it should also be, possibly more importantly, about handling our personal affairs while we are still alive in the event of incapacity.

A recent piece in Forbes outlines a concise list of documents to consider creating in addition to a will when setting up your estate plan.  These include:

  • Medical Power of Attorney
  • Living Will
  • Durable Power of Attorney
  • Revocable Trust
  • HIPAA Release
  • Organ Donation Authorization

Don't forget, your estate plan should not just take care of others - it should also take care of you!

Sun, Sand, And Starting Your Estate Plan: A Summer Checklist

Thinking about an estate plan, but not sure where to start?  If you are in the early stages of establishing your estate plan, below is a checklist of the major decisions you will need to make:


-Beneficiaries: Who will get your assets (house, cars, personal property, money, etc.) when you pass away?  Your spouse, children, siblings, friends, a charity, a combination of these?  Are there any specific items such as jewelry or family heirlooms that you would like a particular individual to receive?  If you are married with children, consider where you would like your assets to go in the unlikely event that your spouse and children predecease you.

-Trustee: If you have young children, it may be beneficial to appoint a trustee to manage and distribute assets on behalf of your children until they reach a certain age.  This trustee will be in charge of a testamentary trust that will be established in your will.  Your trustee will distribute assets for the benefit of your children until your children reach an age or life stage as determined by you.  Once your children reach the threshold you establish, the trust will terminate and your assets will be distributed to your children free of trust.

-Guardian: If you have at least one minor child, you will want to appoint a guardian in the event that you and your spouse or your child's other parent pass away before your child reaches age 18.  Otherwise, you leave this decision up to a court.

-Executor/Personal Representative: Testators typically appoint their spouses or close family members to this role which involves distributing your assets according to your will.  It is always a good idea to list a backup friend or relative just in case your first choice is unable or unwilling to serve.

-Power of Attorney for Medical/Financial Decisions: Typically, spouses serve as agents for each other when it comes to making medical or financial decisions in the event of incapacity; however, this does not have to be the case.  Naming an alternate agent for such decisions is a good idea in the event that your preferred agent is also incapacitated or otherwise unable to serve when needed.  You can select different individuals to make medical and financial decisions on your behalf, these powers do not need to be held by one individual.

Once you start thinking about these major decisions, you will be well on your way to putting together an effective estate plan.

Knowledge Is Power When It Comes To Your Estate Plan

If you are like many Americans who do not have an estate plan in place, your hesitance to move forward with a plan may stem from a lack of understanding of the probate process and from feelings of intimidation related to the gravity of the decisions to be made.  A recent article on financial news website MarketWatch can help to boost your understanding of the probate process and make you feel more confident as you start thinking about your estate plan.  In this piece, estate planning experts provide a comprehensive summary of information to guide individuals through the three common estate planning questions below:

1. How do I avoid probate?

2. Do I need a lawyer to write a will?

3. How do I pick an executor for my will?

While the idea of constructing an estate plan can be overwhelming, developing your understanding of the estate planning and probate processes will make it seem less formidable.

 

More Money, More Problems

Of all people, it would seem that celebrities and the ultra-wealthy would have access to every resource they might need to establish an elaborate and air-tight estate plan.  Unfortunately, that is not always the case.

Most recently, Alan Thicke of "Growing Pains" fame passed away with a seemingly solid plan to split his assets between his children and his third wife, Tanya Callau Thicke.  However, an ugly battle has erupted between the parties stemming from disagreements related to Thicke's prenuptial agreement with Callau and the trust Thicke had established during his lifetime.  For more on this story, check out this piece from CNN.com.

6 Easy Tips For Writing A Will

The process of creating a will can be intimidating, but it doesn't have to be.  Kiplinger's Personal Finance has provided a simple six-step approach to creating a good will:

1) Sort out all of your assets including real estate, financial assets, personal items, and other possessions such as automobiles to help you get started.

2) If you have minor children, then select a guardian who will take care of your children if you pass away.

3) Designate beneficiaries who will receive your assets once you pass away.  This could include family members, friends, or charities.

4) Select an executor who will be in charge of distributing your assets according to your wishes.

5) Meet with an estate planning attorney to make sure your wishes are properly reflected in your documents.

6) Update your will from time to time as you go through life changes.

While thinking about death is probably not at the top of your to-do list, breaking down the pieces of a will into these six simple steps can make the process of creating a will much less daunting.